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Dive into the research topics where Roland E. Kontermann is active.

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Featured researches published by Roland E. Kontermann.


mAbs | 2012

Dual targeting strategies with bispecific antibodies

Roland E. Kontermann

Monoclonal antibodies are widely used for the treatment of cancer, inflammatory and infectious diseases and other disorders. Most of the marketed antibodies are monospecific and therefore capable of interacting and interfering with a single target. However, complex diseases are often multifactorial in nature, and involve redundant or synergistic action of disease mediators or upregulation of different receptors, including crosstalk between their signaling networks. Consequently, blockade of multiple, different pathological factors and pathways may result in improved therapeutic efficacy. This result can be achieved by combining different drugs, or use of the dual targeting strategies applying bispecific antibodies that have emerged as an alternative to combination therapy. This review discusses the various dual targeting strategies for which bispecific antibodies have been developed and provides an overview of the established bispecific antibody formats.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2011

Strategies for extended serum half-life of protein therapeutics.

Roland E. Kontermann

With a growing number of protein therapeutics being developed, many of them exhibiting a short plasma half-life, half-life extension strategies find increasing attention by the biotech and pharmaceutical industry. Extension of the half-life can help to reduce the number of applications and to lower doses, thus are beneficial for therapeutic but also economic reasons. Here, a comprehensive overview of currently developed half-life extension strategies is provided including those aiming at increasing the hydrodynamic volume of a protein drug but also those implementing recycling processes mediated by the neonatal Fc receptor.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Improved Pharmacokinetics of Recombinant Bispecific Antibody Molecules by Fusion to Human Serum Albumin

Dafne Müller; Anette Karle; Bettina Meissburger; Ines Höfig; Roland Stork; Roland E. Kontermann

Recombinant bispecific antibodies such as tandem scFv molecules (taFv), diabodies (Db), or single chain diabodies (scDb) have shown to be able to retarget T lymphocytes to tumor cells, leading to their destruction. However, therapeutic efficacy is hampered by a short serum half-life of these small molecules having molecule masses of 50–60 kDa. Thus, improvement of the pharmacokinetic properties of small bispecific antibody formats is required to enhance efficacy in vivo. In this study, we generated several recombinant bispecific antibody-albumin fusion proteins and analyzed these molecules for biological activity and pharmacokinetic properties. Three recombinant antibody formats were produced by fusing two different scFv molecules, bispecific scDb or taFv molecules, respectively, to human serum albumin (HSA). These constructs (scFv2-HSA, scDb-HSA, taFv-HSA), directed against the tumor antigen carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and the T cell receptor complex molecule CD3, retained full binding capacity to both antigens compared with unfused scFv, scDb, and taFv molecules. Tumor antigen-specific retargeting and activation of T cells as monitored by interleukin-2 release was observed for scDb, scDb-HSA, taFv-HSA, and to a lesser extent for scFv2-HSA. T cell activation could be further enhanced by a target cell-specific costimulatory signal provided by a B7-DbCEA fusion protein. Furthermore, we could demonstrate that fusion to serum albumin strongly increases circulation time of recombinant bispecific antibodies. In addition, our comparative study indicates that single chain diabody-albumin fusion proteins seem to be the most promising format for further studying cytotoxic activities in vitro and in vivo.


Acta Pharmacologica Sinica | 2005

Recombinant Bispecific Antibodies for Cancer Therapy

Roland E. Kontermann

AbstractBispecific antibodies can serve as mediators to retarget effector mechanisms to disease-associated sites. Studies over the past two decades have revealed the potentials but also the limitations of conventional bispecific antibodies. The development of recombinant antibody formats has opened up the possibility of generating bispecific molecules with improved properties. This review summarizes recent developments in the field of recombinant bispecific antibodies and discusses further requirements for clinical development.


BioDrugs | 2009

Strategies to Extend Plasma Half-Lives of Recombinant Antibodies

Roland E. Kontermann

Recombinant antibodies, including whole antibodies, antibody fragments, antibody fusion proteins or conjugates, and more recently also small antibody mimetics, have found increasing applications as therapeutics, e.g. for the treatment of cancer or inflammatory diseases. While whole antibodies have an exceptionally long half-life, small antibody derivatives often suffer from rapid elimination from the circulation. In order to improve administration and therapeutic efficacy, modifications to extend the plasma half-life have been developed and implemented in these antibody formats. This review provides a comprehensive summary of the various strategies currently available to extend plasma half-lives of recombinant antibodies.


BioDrugs | 2010

Bispecific antibodies for cancer immunotherapy: Current perspectives.

Dafne Müller; Roland E. Kontermann

The concept of using bispecific antibodies to retarget immune effector cells for cancer therapy was conceived more than 20 years ago. However, initial clinical studies were rather disappointing mainly due to low efficacy, severe adverse effects and immunogenicity of the bispecific antibodies. A deeper understanding of effector cell biology and especially developments in the field of antibody engineering has led to the generation of new classes of bispecific antibodies capable of circumventing many of these obstacles. Furthermore, new applications were established for bispecific antibodies, such as pre-targeting strategies in radioimmunotherapy or dual targeting approaches in order to improve binding, selectivity, and efficacy. This review summarizes recent progress in the development of bispecific antibodies and describes some new concepts developed for cancer immunotherapy.


Nature Methods | 2010

Specific gene transfer to neurons, endothelial cells and hematopoietic progenitors with lentiviral vectors

Brigitte Anliker; Tobias Abel; Sabrina Kneissl; Juraj Hlavaty; Antonio Caputi; Julia Brynza; Irene C. Schneider; Robert C. Münch; Helga Petznek; Roland E. Kontermann; Ulrike Koehl; Ian C.D. Johnston; Kari Keinänen; Ulrike Müller; Christine Hohenadl; Hannah Monyer; Klaus Cichutek; Christian J. Buchholz

We present a flexible and highly specific targeting method for lentiviral vectors based on single-chain antibodies recognizing cell-surface antigens. We generated lentiviral vectors specific for human CD105+ endothelial cells, human CD133+ hematopoietic progenitors and mouse GluA-expressing neurons. Lentiviral vectors specific for CD105 or for CD20 transduced their target cells as efficiently as VSV-G pseudotyped vectors but discriminated between endothelial cells and lymphocytes in mixed cultures. CD133-targeted vectors transduced CD133+ cultured hematopoietic progenitor cells more efficiently than VSV-G pseudotyped vectors, resulting in stable long-term transduction. Lentiviral vectors targeted to the glutamate receptor subunits GluA2 and GluA4 exhibited more than 94% specificity for neurons in cerebellar cultures and when injected into the adult mouse brain. We observed neuron-specific gene modification upon transfer of the Cre recombinase gene into the hippocampus of reporter mice. This approach allowed targeted gene transfer to many cell types of interest with an unprecedented degree of specificity.


mAbs | 2017

The making of bispecific antibodies

Ulrich Brinkmann; Roland E. Kontermann

ABSTRACT During the past two decades we have seen a phenomenal evolution of bispecific antibodies for therapeutic applications. The ‘zoo’ of bispecific antibodies is populated by many different species, comprising around 100 different formats, including small molecules composed solely of the antigen-binding sites of two antibodies, molecules with an IgG structure, and large complex molecules composed of different antigen-binding moieties often combined with dimerization modules. The application of sophisticated molecular design and genetic engineering has solved many of the technical problems associated with the formation of bispecific antibodies such as stability, solubility and other parameters that confer drug properties. These parameters may be summarized under the term ‘developability’. In addition, different ‘target product profiles’, i.e., desired features of the bispecific antibody to be generated, mandates the need for access to a diverse panel of formats. These may vary in size, arrangement, valencies, flexibility and geometry of their binding modules, as well as in their distribution and pharmacokinetic properties. There is not ‘one best format’ for generating bispecific antibodies, and no single format is suitable for all, or even most of, the desired applications. Instead, the bispecific formats collectively serve as a valuable source of diversity that can be applied to the development of therapeutics for various indications. Here, a comprehensive overview of the different bispecific antibody formats is provided.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

N-glycosylation as novel strategy to improve pharmacokinetic properties of bispecific single-chain diabodies.

Roland Stork; Kirstin A. Zettlitz; Dafne Müller; Miriam Rether; Franz-Georg Hanisch; Roland E. Kontermann

The therapeutic efficacy of recombinant antibodies such as single-chain Fv fragments and small bispecific or bifunctional molecules is often limited by rapid elimination from the circulation because of their small size. Here, we have investigated the effects of N-glycosylation on the activity and pharmacokinetics of a small bispecific single-chain diabody (scDb CEACD3) developed for the retargeting of cytotoxic T cells to CEA-expressing tumor cells. We could show that the introduction of N-glycosylation sequons into the flanking linker and a C-terminal extension results in the production of N-glycosylated molecules after expression in transfected HEK293 cells. N-Glycosylated scDb variants possessing 3, 6, or 9 N-glycosylation sites, respectively, retained antigen binding activity and bispecificity for target and effector cells as shown in a target cell-dependent IL-2 release assay, although activity was reduced ∼3–5-fold compared with the unmodified scDb. All N-glycosylated scDb variants exhibited a prolonged circulation time compared with scDb, leading to a 2–3-fold increase of the area under curve (AUC). In comparison, conjugation of a branched 40-kDa PEG chain increased AUC by a factor of 10.6, while a chimeric anti-CEA IgG1 molecule had the longest circulation time with a 17-fold increase in AUC. Thus, N-glycosylation complements the repertoire of strategies to modulate pharmacokinetics of small recombinant antibody molecules by an approach that moderately prolongs circulation time.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Biodistribution of a Bispecific Single-chain Diabody and Its Half-life Extended Derivatives

Roland Stork; Emmanuelle Campigna; Bruno Robert; Dafne Müller; Roland E. Kontermann

Small recombinant antibody molecules such as bispecific single-chain diabodies (scDb) possessing a molecular mass of ∼55 kDa are rapidly cleared from circulation. We have recently extended the plasma half-life of scDb applying various strategies including PEGylation, N-glycosylation and fusion to an albumin-binding domain (ABD) from streptococcal protein G. Here, we further analyzed the influence of these modifications on the biodistribution of a scDb directed against carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and CD3 capable of retargeting T cells to CEA-expressing tumor cells. We show that a prolonged circulation time results in an increased accumulation in CEA+ tumors, which was most pronounced for scDb-ABD and PEGylated scDb. Interestingly, tumor accumulation of the scDb-ABD fusion protein was ∼2-fold higher compared with PEGylated scDb, although both molecules exhibit similar plasma half-lives and similar affinities for CEA. Comparing half-lives in neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) wild-type and FcRn heavy chain knock-out mice the contribution of the FcRn to the long plasma half-life of scDb-ABD was confirmed. The half-life of scDb-ABD was ∼2-fold lower in the knock-out mice, while no differences were observed for PEGylated scDb. Binding of the scDb derivatives to target and effector cells was not or only marginally affected by the modifications, although, compared with scDb, a reduced cytotoxic activity was observed for scDb-ABD, which was further reduced in the presence of albumin. In summary, these findings demonstrate that the extended half-life of a bispecific scDb translates into improved accumulation in antigen-positive tumors but that modifications might also affect scDb-mediated cytotoxicity.

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Meike Hutt

University of Stuttgart

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